Category: Uncategorized

  • Fitness 2.0

    Garmin 305

    As many of you know I’m on a health and fitness kick. I’ve tried to get back in shape (meaning healthy not chiseled abdominals heh) several times in the past and I’ve consistently failed miserably. More often than not its because going to the gym is super boring. This time I’m making the process of getting healthy again into a personal video game. The idea is that if I’m always trying to beat my high score i’ll have more fun than just doing exercise for the sake of it.

    Weapons of choice for nerding out my workouts:

  • Garmin Forerunner 305 (watch GPS / heart rate monitor etc)
  • Motionbased (upload and view all your GPS tracks/elevation/speed/heart rate etc)
  • Google Earth (look at tracks from space)
  • Traineo (graph progress set goals learn from other fitness geeks)
  • Fitness 2.0 Tracks

    I do this mainly by using my GPS when I do outdoor activities like running, cycling, and snowboarding. When I get back home from the outings I then upload my metrics into Motionbased. After that I can see speeds, elevation, heart rate etc. I can even look at my tracks on Google Earth and Google Maps. The image above is a screenshot of run I did the other day as seen on Google Earth.

    Its much more fun to doing these activities knowing that you can look at how fast you went, how far you ran, or how hard you worked. Over time I’ve been able to see my heart rate go down while my speeds and distances increase. You might think this is a fairly expensive undertaking but I consider it an investment in my health. What could be more important to you than your own health? Of course gym memberships are pricey as well. If you’re not into the geeky bits you could always just use a stop watch, a map and check your pulse but then wheres the fun in that?!

    Mathew Honan has an article in Wired along these same lines in the February 2007 issue.

    Update: Here are some more tracks/examples etc.

    Update 2: FYI – spell checking and proof reading your blog posts is always advisable when you post something late at night. Sorry about that original post.

    Update 3: I guess this is my version of fatblogging ;)


  • Workspace on Canada AM

    Workspace was on Canada AM (a national TV morning show in Canada) a while back. I ripped the video of the Canada AM website for your viewing pleasure:

    Video


  • The Last Minute Blog – New Look

    Aint nobody dope as me Im dressed so fresh so clean
    so fresh and so clean clean.

    Most of you will have to leave the comfort of your RSS readers to peep the new look by Terry Ng.

    Screengrab for posterity


  • Joost – TV on the Internet for real

    Joost Hybrid P2P

    How Joost’s hybrid peer-to-peer system works. After Joost makes a show available, the first users to request it (A) query the network at large (B) to see whether peers can provide the program. If they can’t, the request goes to a content server (C), which streams the show, interspersed with individually targeted ads, directly to each viewer’s screen (D). While the users watch, short segments of the show and the ad are saved to their local hard disks (E). In this way, the entire show and a variety of ads are seeded throughout the network. So when another user (F) requests the same title, that show, along with a targeted ad, comes not from the server but from the network, one segment at a time. Once again, fragments of the show and ad are stored to the new user’s hard disk (G), ready to be streamed to others. – Ted Greenwald

    I had a chance to play with Joost this weekend and it’s incredible. Daniel Salber (no url?) did a fantastic job of porting it to the Mac so quickly. I was impressed with how its not really that buggy and its alpha…

    First random thoughts on Joost:

    Wow, this is actually TV on the internet. People have been talking about it for ages but this is the first time I’ve seen anything approach traditional TV in terms of quality and ease of use on my computer. It’s full screen, good quality, near instant on, it’s free, and it has high quality content. If Joost opens its platform to allow people to upload their stuff this I’ll be all over this thing like a fat kid on a smartie. If they keep it closed off they just won’t be able to compete with traditional TV.

    I love the idea of never having to store video content locally when you can just query it any time from online. The hybrid P2P model of video distribution is also fascinating and it appears to be working!

    This Wired article on Joost explains everything

    I recommend you try it out.


  • Steven Spielberg Documentary


  • Scientists to Vie for $25M Climate Prize

    climate-prize.jpg
    AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth

    LONDON — Sir Richard Branson on Friday announced a $25 million prize for the scientist who comes up with a way to extract greenhouse gases from the atmosphere, comparing it to the 17th-century quest to revolutionize navigation by determining longitude.

    Full Story
    Official Virgin Earth Contest Site

    UPDATE: video of Gore and Branson discussing this.


  • Dave Brubeck – Take Five (watch the whole thing)

    Speaking of old skool awesomeness:


  • sweet moves


  • Steve Jobs on DRM

    Very interesting read: http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughtsonmusic/


  • Charlie Rose – Climate Change

    Michael Oppenheimer of Princeton University talks about the Intergovenmental Panel on Climate Change report.

    Skip to 2m35s…